civil engineer wrote:
I'm coming late to this so if I'm way off track then give me a sound beating.
Stevei, am I correct in my understanding that your figures suggest that 'speeding' vehicles have fewer accidents than 'non speeding' vehicles?
No, I was just taking Paul's figures from this statement:
"Only about 1% of crashes involve an otherwise responsible motorists in excess of a speed limit, yet 60% of motorists are speeding at sample sites in free flowing conditions."
And plugging them into the relevant statistical equations, however it's wrong to do so because we need to correct for potential differences in conditions between when the free flowing traffic data is collected, and when accidents happen. Some studies have purported to do this, but none have done it in quite what I consider the right way, so the question can't in fact be answered at present.
However, regarding what you were saying about some people just being better at processing all the information while driving along, I think the simplest demonstration of this is the difference between people in playing driving games on a computer. E.g. I can play Gran Turismo far better than a friend of mine - I drive faster and crash less than she does when playing it. This is mirrored in real-life driving, where I don't have accidents, and she has minor accidents fairly frequently.
A really good game to illustrate this is Need For Speed Underground 2, where you have to do "real" driving in between races, to get from venue to venue. It's really quite remarkable just how fast you can drive, yet never crash, provided you adhere to the rule of always being able to stop in the distance you can guarantee to be clear. It means that you accelerate and decelerate rapidly a lot, but provided you scrub the speed off when the hazard first appears, and keep your speed down to a level where you can always scrub enough speed off in time if a hazard appears at the limit of your vision, you're safe, even though you might be travelling at many times what the legal speed limit would be in real life.